29 January 2012

A black hole is a "place in space where gravity pulls so much that even light cannot get out." Black holes are often created by the death of a star, when an immense amount of matter is squeezed into an impossibly smaller space, drastically strengthening gravity's pull. Some black holes are as tiny as a single atom — others have a mass equivalent to millions of stars.

Since no light can get out, black holes are invisible. Scientists can only hope to catch a glimpse of a black hole's "shadow." "As dust and gas swirls around the black hole before it is drawn inside, a kind of cosmic traffic jam ensues," — like water draining in a bathtub. That "shadow" is known as a black hole's "event horizon" — and it can be photographed.

One Day In Your Life

KLSE

Another Day

歌衫淚影 (梅艷芳)

MyCompleteness

Recognize that we are not flawed because we have negative traits. No one has only positive traits. Recognizing that we have negative traits means that we are complete. And in that completeness we gain grater access to our universal, nonlocal selves.